Front Cover: Doping of organic semiconductors (Phys. Status Solidi A 1/2013)
physica status solidi (a) – applications and materials science Wiley 210:1 (2013)
Open-Circuit Voltage and Effective Gap of Organic Solar Cells
Advanced Functional Materials 10:6 (2013)
Abstract:
The open-circuit voltage (V) of an organic solar cell is limited by the donor-acceptor material system. The effective gap E between the electron affinity of the acceptor and the ionization potential of the donor is usually regarded as the upper limit for V, which is only reached for T → 0 K. This relation is confirmed for a number of small-molecule bulk heterojunction p-i-n type solar cells by varying the temperature and illumination intensity. With high precision, the low temperature limit of V is identical to E . Furthermore, the influence of the hole transport material in a p-doped hole transport layer and the donor-acceptor mixing ratio on this limit V is found to be negligible. Varying the active material system, the quantitative relation between V and E is found to be identity. A comparison of V in a series of nine different donor-acceptor material combinations opens a pathway to quantitatively determine the ionization potential of a donor material or the electron affinity of an acceptor material. © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co.Self-passivation of molecular n-type doping during air exposure using a highly efficient air-instable dopant
Physica Status Solidi (A) Applications and Materials Science (2013)
Abstract:
In contrast to p-dopants, highly efficient molecular n-dopants are prone to degradation in air due to their low ionization potentials, limiting the processing conditions of doped functional organic devices. In this contribution, we investigate the air-stability of pure films of the n-dopant tetrakis(1,3,4,6,7,8-hexahydro-2H-pyrimido[1,2-a]pyrimidinato)ditungsten(II) (W2(hpp)4) and of C60 layers doped by W2(hpp)4. We find that 1/3 of the initial conductivity of the doped C thin films can be restored by thermal annealing in vacuum after a drop by 5 orders of magnitude upon air exposure. Furthermore, we show by ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS) and Seebeck measurements that the Fermi level shift toward the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of C remains after air exposure, clearly indicating a conservation of n-doping. We explain these findings by a down-shift of the W(hpp) energy levels upon charge-transfer to a host material with deeper lying energy-levels, facilitating a protection against oxidation in air. Consequently, the observed recovery of the conductivity can be understood in terms of a self-passivation of the molecular n-doping. Hence, an application of highly efficient n-doped thin films in functional organic devices handled even under ambient conditions during fabrication is feasible. © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.Solution processed zinc oxide nanopyramid/silver nanowire transparent network films with highly tunable light scattering properties
Nanoscale Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 5:10 (2013) 4400-4403
Morphology and molecular orientation of ethyl-substituted dicyanovinyl-sexithiophene films for photovoltaic applications
Thin Solid Films 525 (2012) 97-105